Showing posts with label Lavrio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lavrio. Show all posts
31 October 2013
LOUIS AURA (ex-ORIENT QUEEN) Part 8
Friday 20th September 2013
Today we are due in Lavrio(n), a very small port on the Greek mainland, at the very early hour of 6 a.m. Captain Goumas suggested that we might not want to be up on the Bridge at 5.30 a.m. for arrival at that hour and he was certainly right in my case! We are due to leave here before 11 a.m. but there was time to go ashore from the gangway and look at the ferries.
Louis Aura in Lavrio
New terminal building
Ruston Bucyrus should be proud of these, still in use
I was also surprised to see a brand new terminal building. Goodness, that’s new, and built since my last visit here a year ago. I later discovered that the Athens/Piraeus authorities are trying to encourage more cruise ships to use an alternative port to Piraeus, because of the number of passengers involved, so presumably are trying to entice them to Lavrion with a new terminal building. Certainly Piraeus cruise quays and terminal berthing facilities are sometimes full, although a new port gate and quayside are currently being created at one end of the Great Harbour.
It is presumably worthwhile for Louis Cruises to use the port of Lavrion (as well as Piraeus) as they seem to have exclusive use of the new terminal facilities in this tiny town. Many passengers disembarked here including our Swiss friends, with many more embarking in their place. Lavrio is about 55 kms south-east of Athens. There is a coach service to and from Athens airport, but when I considered joining LOUIS AURA here at Lavrion on mainland Greece I was unable to find any local overnight accommodation at all.
I had arranged to take an excursion to the Ancient Temple of Poseidon and Cape Sounion, and was looking forward to that. Last September I had visited Lavrio’s local museum and seen many wondrous artefacts which had been discovered at Cape Sounion and I was keen to see the site. (See 2012 blog pieces, entitled Greece 2012). Unfortunately it was not to be, as there was not enough support to run the excursion, which disappointed me.
Aqua Maria
Leaving at 14.00 hours
Instead I walked along to see the ferries, which looked very familiar. I sailed on AQUA MARIA from Mesta to Lavrio, arriving here on 5th September 2012, and saw MACEDON then too.
Macedon
Macedon's funnel logo
This time MACEDON was due to sail soon and I saw the ramp go up and the water start to churn. She pulled away from the quayside and at that moment a small motorbike arrived, with a passenger hopping off the pillion as fast he could. He was too late to catch the ferry though, so got back on the motor cycle and they drove away – I suppose it is interesting to watch other people’s timekeeping.
He missed it
Sailing at 08.30 hours
Marmaris Express
Welcome to Lavrio
I went inside the new terminal building too, but soon it was time to return to the ship ready for sailing soon after 10.30 a.m.
In the terminal building
Check in
Alongside
Also in port
Passers by, seen from Lavrio
On the Bridge I met and chatted with the Safety Officer and then we had to wait for the passenger lifeboat drill to be finished. The Port Captain joined Captain Goumas and eventually we were able to sail into the sparkling blue water, heading for our next port of Istanbul tomorrow.
Last view of Lavrio
I bought this in Mykonos
I was given this on board
Another souvenir
And another souvenir
Rhodes postcard
Another Rhodes postcard; shall we play 'Name the ships'?
Pocket Guide
Another Pocket Guide
Favourite daytime venue
Restaurant late lunch was fun with other friends, and included making gold and silver foil miniature wine glasses from chocolate wrappers to amuse a certain little girl. Then it was time to rest and pack, ready for the next part of what I like to call the social whirl! A Guest Lecturer has come on board and we wanted to attend his first talk entitled “Overview of the Development of the Mediterranean Sea through Time”. Dr. Angelos F. Vlachos is an Historian and Greek Tourism Specialist. It was very interesting to hear him, especially as he lectured in English, which was obviously not his mother tongue.
We met him for pre-dinner drinks, together with Mary Ann from Archers Tours, and continued into the Restaurant together for our final dinner on board.
By 10 p.m. it was time for our final night-time visit to the Bridge for something rather unique: the entry and transit of the Dardanelles Straits. The Programme told us that the transit time through the entrance of the Dardanelles Strait will depend upon the “Entering Orders” that we receive from the Turkish Traffic Control Officials. As we enter the Straits, one of the World War 1 War Memorials is visible from the left (port) side of the vessel. The transit of the strait will last approximately two and a half hours. You will see Europe on the port side and Asia on the right (starboard) side, the Programme concluded.
The Straits Pilot came on board and there were happy greetings for him from Captain Goumas, as well as from his old Turkish colleague Kapetan Saim. There was almost total darkness all around of course, but it was fascinating to watch the transit though this meandering body of water as we continued to change direction around the sharp bends. It seems the depth also varies in places, as I saw the Pilot consulting his electronic depth indicator frequently, as well as consulting with various Officers on the Bridge. There was other traffic too and the time passed quickly as we headed onward towards Istanbul. I was offered tea and then chocolate at regular intervals, so the whole passage seemed somewhat like a dream, but I felt very privileged to be there.
Ships seen: Aqua Maria, Macedon, Marmari Express, Ocean Majesty in the distance, and Cruise Europa going south through the Dardanelles.
To be concluded….
13 October 2012
Greece 2012 Part 9
Greece Part 9
Lavrio & 'Taxiarchis'
Wednesday 5th September 2012
This morning I woke up at sea, on the AQUA MARIA, under bedding that included an authentic Japanese blanket – unexpected proof of the Japanese origins of this ship. Last night we left Mesta port in darkness, which wasn’t helped by the clouds of black smoke coming out of the funnels, but the engines sounded all right, and we will soon be arriving at the Greek mainland port of Lavrio, which is about 55 kms south-east of Athens. The sun still hadn’t risen when we docked at 6.15 a.m. but we could see that this small port was very quiet. Ferries could berth in one part of the harbour, and private yachts and fishing craft were in the other parts, with the town behind. Apparently the population is only about 5,000 people.
Welcome to Lavrio
Macedon of Goutos Lines
There was no port bus for the half dozen of us ‘footies’ so we all had to shoulder our luggage and walk towards the port gates and then the town. Everything seemed very quiet, with the occasional dog walker (dog on a lead) and the more frequent unsavoury-looking dogs lying around the paths and quayside, and still asleep.
I think many of us have read over the last few years about the number of people coming to this port illegally, by road or sea, and quite often from Turkey; one can feel sympathy for those who feel they must leave their own country and hazard their lives to get here, hoping for a better and/or safer life. Of course this is quite a simplistic view; I had read about refugee camps being set up outside the town and the local authorities (and citizens) finding it extremely hard to cope with such a big influx of people, often with no proof of identity, and who would not qualify for refugee or asylum status.
After walking around the town in the heat, we located the local Archaeological Museum and enjoyed its exhibits. Just south of here is Mount Sounion which is now an important site for discovering remains of previous civilisations, many of them now on display here. I liked seeing the acanthus leaves on pillars and other artefacts from the Hellenistic period in Greece (about the 4th Century B.C.). The acanthus was one of the plants that the Romans brought to Britain and I grow it very easily in my own garden in England. We saw some obsidian tools, which are made of volcanic material. We also saw pictures of some wonderful silver jewellery which had been dug up in this area, and was so fine that the Lavrio people had been asked/instructed to give it to the Athens Museum for display there. The old argentiferous ore (silver) found in the 10th Century B.C. in Lavrion had been mined and then abandoned, but the mines had been re-opened in the 1800s by a mining engineer called Andreas Kordelias but are no longer working.
I loved several of the small pieces of statuary, especially one little piece from the 4th Century B.C. which named the three people standing and then said “and adorants”, which I think is a charming description of those sitting at their feet.
Back at the harbour side, near one of the quays, we could see a white-painted lifeboat just floating, apparently abandoned. We could see lettering and a number on it, but it was almost impossible to guess its origins. It seems to be made of fibre-glass, possibly from a 1960s or 1970s passenger ship, so again we will need identification help when we get home.
Abandoned lifeboat
I wonder where this came from
Issham Al Baher
Taxiarchis and her unusually positioned lifeboats
The saintly Taxiarchis
It was soon time to get back to the ferry port and embark on our ship for the overnight sail from Lavrio to Limnos: it is yet another 1970s built ship, this time the saintly TAXIARCHIS of NEL Lines. She was built in Norway in 1976 at 10,749 gross tons and sailed in New Zealand waters until 1994 when she came to Greece, so has had many owners, routes and names over the years. She is classified as a ro-ro/passenger ship. My cabin key was made in Norway, so now I know why.
Taxiarchis for our overnight sail
My cabin key
Macedon looking good
Embarking
Flower bower
Deck view
Cabin
Deck plan
Closed cafe
This was on the wall in the cafe
Deck view on the port side
Deck view
AQUA MARIA was berthed on our port side, and we noticed a dent in the metal above her bridge. MACEDON was on our starboard side and we could see her funnel and logo more closely from our deck.
Macedon at dusk
Funnel logo
Aqua Maria, and a dent above the Bridge
Marmari Express
Goodbye Aqua Maria
Cheap fuel again
We sailed in a cloud of black smoke, so I suppose cheap fuel is being used with old engines, but hey, this is becoming the norm on this trip….
Ships seen: Aqua Maria, Macedon of Goutos Lines, Issham Al Baher the private yacht, Taxiarchis, Alios of Salamis, the unidentified lifeboat, Marmari Express
To be continued….
Labels:
acanthus,
Aqua Maria,
Goutos Lines,
Japanese blanket,
Lavrio,
Macedon,
Marmari Express,
Mesta,
Mount Sounion,
Norway,
Taxiarchis
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